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2026 FIFA World Cup
12JUN

SoFi workers vote 96% to strike

3 min read
09:25UTC

UNITE HERE Local 11 announced on 6 June that 96% of its roughly 2,000 SoFi Stadium hospitality workers voted to authorise a strike, four days before the venue hosts the USA against Paraguay.

SportDeveloping

UNITE HERE Local 11 announced on Saturday 6 June that 96% of its members had voted to authorise a strike, covering roughly 2,000 cooks, dishwashers, bartenders and concession workers at Los Angeles Stadium, the venue branded SoFi outside the tournament 1. No walkout date has been set. Both sides return to bargaining on Monday 8 June, four days before the venue hosts the USA against Paraguay opener on Friday 12 June.

Two demands sit on the table. Legends Global, the concessions employer, last offered a wage freeze for some workers and around 25 cents an hour for others 2. The union also wants contract language allowing staff to strike if ICE, US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, creates what worker Yolanda Fierro called "reasonable fear for safety" on the grounds.

That second demand has two addressees, which is why the dispute can stall even if the pay gap closes. Wages sit with Legends Global; venue accreditation and access sit with FIFA. Only FIFA can grant the ICE-exclusion clause, because Legends Global has no control over who reaches the grounds. The mandate hardens a campaign that ran from a May rally to last week's strike-authorisation ballot , and it ties this fight to the same enforcement apparatus shadowing Iran's three border crossings. Neither Legends Global nor FIFA has commented.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

About 2,000 workers who serve food, run bars, and staff concessions at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles have voted overwhelmingly to go on strike. Their employer, a company called Legends Global, offered a wage freeze for some workers and a tiny pay rise for others, which the workers rejected as inadequate. They also want a guarantee that immigration enforcement officers will not operate inside the stadium during the tournament. The workers have not yet set a walk-out date, and both sides return to talks on Monday 8 June, four days before the USA play their opening World Cup match at SoFi on 12 June. The timing gives the workers significant leverage: a strike on opening night would be an embarrassing image for the tournament.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The SoFi dispute has two structurally distinct components that make settlement harder.

The wage component traces to a contract cycle that has been running without resolution for approximately a year. Legends Global's last offer (a freeze for some workers, roughly 25 cents an hour for others) lands against an LA inflation environment where food and rent costs have risen significantly faster than that figure since the last contract settled.

The ICE-exclusion demand has no equivalent precedent in US sports venue labour disputes. Human Rights Watch documented 167,000 ICE arrests in World Cup host-city regions between January 2025 and March 2026, making the union's largely immigrant workforce genuinely vulnerable to enforcement activity during matches.

FIFA controls accreditation but not federal law-enforcement access. Legends Global controls employment but also cannot exclude federal agents. The demand requires either FIFA or the US government to provide a commitment neither is authorised or willing to give.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    A walkout on 12 June would make the SoFi labour dispute the dominant opening-night image of the tournament in US media, overshadowing the USA vs Paraguay match and the opening ceremony at the same venue.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Consequence

    FIFA's silence on both the wage and ICE-exclusion demands (ID:3538) leaves the organisation exposed to the reputational cost of a strike without having taken any visible step to prevent one.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Opportunity

    Monday 8 June bargaining gives Legends Global a 96-hour window to settle the wage component and remove the immediate strike threat, provided ICE exclusion is either tabled or addressed separately through political channels.

    Immediate · Reported
First Reported In

Update #15 · Iran's squad in, its staff out

CBS Los Angeles· 6 Jun 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
FIFA
FIFA
The 48-team tournament opened on schedule with 104 matches and a $13.1 billion projected revenue cycle, but three of the first weekend's most consequential stories, Iran's fan lockout, SoFi's embedded strike clause, and Malagò's eligibility suspension, were each decided by domestic legal systems operating outside FIFA's authority.
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Mohamed Ouahbi takes charge of his first senior match in football management against the five-time world champions, with the full-strength defensive structure that reached the 2022 semi-finals intact and facing a Brazilian lineup missing its three most celebrated attackers.
Brazil
Brazil
Brazil open Group C on Saturday at MetLife without Neymar, Estêvão or Militão against a Morocco side managed by a first-time senior coach, making their opener the most consequential group-stage fixture of the opening weekend in terms of pre-tournament expectation versus squad availability.
FIGC / Italy
FIGC / Italy
CONI's referral of the Malagò eligibility question entirely to ANAC means Italy's federation enters the group stage without a confirmed president-elect, with the anti-corruption regulator holding the power to remove the Serie A-backed frontrunner from the ballot ten days before the 22 June election.
United States
United States
The co-host avoided its worst opening image when SoFi workers ratified a deal averting a strike before Friday's Paraguay opener, though the contractual walkout clause means the threat is deferred not dissolved. Pochettino named his XI with Tillman over Reyna, signalling he will manage risk rather than chase headlines against Paraguay.
FFIRI / Iran
FFIRI / Iran
Iran's squad trains in Tijuana with 14 staff still barred from the US, and learned on 9 June that their entire 8% supporter ticket allocation for all three Group G matches was revoked under OFAC sanctions. FFIRI is preparing an Article 4 FIFA complaint over the conditions of participation.